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gnureadline 6.3.3

Stand-alone GNU readline module

Some platforms, such as Mac OS X, do not ship with GNU readline installed.
The readline extension module in the standard library of Mac “system” Python
uses NetBSD’s editline (libedit) library instead, which is a readline
replacement with a less restrictive software license.

As the alternatives to GNU readline do not have fully equivalent functionality,
it is useful to add proper readline support to these platforms. This module
achieves this by bundling the standard Python readline module with the GNU
readline source code, which is compiled and statically linked to it. The end
result is a package which is simple to install and requires no extra shared
libraries.

The module is called gnureadline so as not to clash with the readline module
in the standard library. This keeps polite installers such as pip happy and
is sufficient for shells such as IPython. In order to use this module in
the standard Python shell it has to be installed with the more impolite
easy_install from setuptools. It is recommended that you use the latest
pip >= 1.4 together with setuptools >= 0.8 to install gnureadline. This will
download a binary wheel from PyPI if available, thereby bypassing the need
for compilation and its slew of potential problems.

The module can be used with both Python 2.x and 3.x, and has been tested with
Python versions 2.6, 2.7, 3.2 and 3.3. The first three numbers of the module
version reflect the version of the underlying GNU readline library (major,
minor and patch level), while any additional fourth number distinguishes
different module updates based on the same readline library.

This module is usually unnecessary on Linux and other Unix systems with default
readline support. An exception is if you have a Python distribution that does
not include GNU readline due to licensing restrictions (such as ActiveState’s
ActivePython). If you are using Windows, which also ships without GNU
readline, you might want to consider using the pyreadline module instead,
which is a readline replacement written in pure Python that interacts with the
Windows clipboard.